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Poems

or, A Miscellany of Sonnets, Satyrs, Drollery, Panegyricks, Elegies, &c. At the Instance, and Request of Several Friends, Times, and Occasions, Composed; and now at their command Collected, and Committed to the Press. By the Author, M. Stevenson
 
 

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Upon a great Windy Night.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Upon a great Windy Night.

What time soft flumber in her armes did lock me
My Bed turn'd Cradle, and the Wind did rock me
But fear of a dead sleep me waking kept,
The more that I was rockt, the less I slept.
Suspicion bad me quickly quit my Bed,
For fear I brought an old house on my head.
But faster than I could get on my cloths,
The unseen winds from misty caverns rose.
The Earth's deliver'd of a Timpanie,
And all the Captives of her womb set free.
I envy'd the instinct of Rats and Mice,
That run away by their own Prophesies.
Sometime I think, and that my dread reforms,
Old houses oftner fall in calms than stormes;
But all that Observation could impart,
Was blown up by an earthquake of my heart.

85

Thou God of winds said I, some pitty have,
And reeling ships, and rotten houses save.
My Anchor hope fled with the flitting sand,
Whilst I was almost cast away by Land.
The wanton signs did on wind-musick play,
Whilst tottering turrets tript themselves away.
Fair Edifices in the furious stormes,
Relaps'd to rubbish, and forgat their formes.